This startup, borne from a failed $500 million Silicon Valley darling, believes it has the cure for what’s ailing voice assistants
John Foster head shot   Aiqudo CEO
John Foster head shot Aiqudo CEO

(Aiqudo CEO John Foster thinks there's a problem with today's voice assistants.Aiqudo)

Aiqudo wants to make every app on your smartphone controllable with voice commands, regardless of what device or voice assistant you prefer.

The company has ties to Quixey, a much-hyped Silicon Valley startup that was backed by the likes of Alibaba and Softbank, but flamed out earlier this year.

The idea gets at an underlying problem with today's voice assistants: They're effectively "walled gardens" that could fragment what devices and apps you're likely to use.

All the big tech companies want to hear the sound of your voice.

Having a shapeless digital assistant that can tell you the weather, play music, and manage your day is now table stakes. There’s Siri, Alexa, Cortana, Google Assistant, Bixby, and others likely to come. They’re in phones, speakers, cars, fridges, headphones, and, likely soon, augmented-reality devices.

In every case, the fundamental goal is to reduce the need for touch controls and make it so these voice assistants — and thus, the powerful companies that make them — become the filter through which you access all your information.

But John Foster thinks there’s a problem: Everyone with a hand at the table is setting up their own silos.

"The way voice is shaping up right now — Amazon particularly, but also most of these other guys — what it looks like they’re trying to do is create another walled garden," Foster says. "Amazon wants you to be in their experience. And they want to be there anytime you think of anything you want to buy. Which is great, it’s super convenient. But you have to buy it from Amazon. That’s how they’re starting to encircle the world of the consumer, by making you do everything inside of Alexa."

amazon-echo-full
amazon-echo-full

(The Amazon Echo has made Alexa a familiar name in the US.YouTube)

Foster is the CEO of Aiqudo, a San Jose, California-based startup with a goofy name, a complex backstory, and just over 20 employees. The company came out of "semi-stealth" mode late last month; it’s raised $5.2 million in Series A funding from Atlantic Bridge Capital since its formation in March. It has also acquired Sophia, an Irish startup that’s worked on using machine learning for digital advertising.

On a broad level, Aiqudo is trying to make it so you can do things within any app using just your voice. It has an app called Q Actions, available in beta on both the Google Play Store and the Alexa Skills Store, which demonstrates this tech. (The company says versions for iOS and Google Assistant are in the certification process as well.)